I’m going to be honest…I’m feeling pretty bummed as I sit here to write this post. I have had my first “wish-I-could-do-over” teaching days of the school year. I haven’t felt this icky about a teaching day since…2005. Oh Amy, you would have flipped out to see my utter lack of zen today.
It’s all too easy for me to focus on what I’ve not been doing well this year, how I have been falling oh-so-very short. But I’m going to view this opportunity to reflect on my practice as a way to reset and to return to the core of my teaching soul for the coming week.
One bright spot in all of my classes this year has been a small change I’ve made in how I talk about books. One thing Penny Kittle emphasized this past summer (love to #UNHLit13) was the importance of book talks as part of her class every day. I’ve always gushed about books I’m reading (see Shana’s post “Fangirling About Books”, which may as well have been my post! Kindred spirits!), and I’ve always prided myself on being able to match students with books that resonate with them. But I decided to make book talks a regular part of each day, right after starting class with independent reading.
This Monday I’ll talk about books #51 (Invisibility by Andrea Cremer and David Levithan) and #52 (Dash & Lily’s Book of Dares by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan). My students like finding the connection between the two books, though the connection between these is kind of obvious!
There are myriad benefits to having these daily book talks. Some of the great books I read from and talk about are new to my students, and sometimes there are some who have read them already. This has created community and conversation around books, as students share opinions, do their own spontaneous plugs for the books, ask questions, and start fighting about who gets to read them first! Students started a Book Wait List on the white board.
It has surprised me how much the students enjoy the book talks. One day a couple weeks ago, I forgot to book talk (it’s a verb now!), and Stephanie, who doesn’t ever say anything in class raised her hand and asked, “Are you not going to talk about a book today?” When a new student joined our class, I had Noe help her get oriented, setting up her notebook and so forth. I overheard her say, “After we read, she introduces a couple of books. It’s one of my favorite parts of class, no joke. There’s a lot of cool books she shows us.” The other day, students pointed out that I neglected to update the titles for book talks on the agenda.
All of the energy around books has helped create a culture of reading in our classroom so that even the most reluctant readers are giving books a try. The books have become a bridge between me and some of the students who are typically “hard to reach.” It’s still a challenge to be sure, and there are days some students are fake reading, but for the most part, students are realizing the books are here to stay!
For me, it’s always easier to dwell on the negative, but when I stop to think about it, there are quite a few things going well. It’s a process, and I’m growing and figuring out how to make my class an authentic reading and writing workshop. It is a source of strength to know there are people in my PLN all over the country striving to do the same!
(Coming up next month: How to respond to the question, “How do you assess that?!”)



make or break the relationship with a student for the whole year. Then you see him. He’s got a thin book–historical fiction. And he’s reading. He’s really reading Once by Morris Gleitzman.
someone had recently crashed–maybe literally. In a plate on the coffee table there was an outbreak of cigarette butts; next to that, rolling papers, a packet of Golden Virginia tobacco, an open package of Chips Ahoy!, a mangled copy of Interview, some emaciated starlet on the floor along with a white sweatshirt and some other clothes. (As if to expressly avoid this pile, a woman’s pair of black pantyhose clung for dear life to the back of the other beach chair.) A girl had kissed one wall while wearing black lipstick. An acoustic guitar was propped in the corner beside an old hiker’s backpack, the faded red nylon covered with handwriting.



My twin sons Zach and Chase both plan to enlist in the military after they serve two year missions for our church. Every once in a while they will come home from Barnes and Noble with a new book. Chase brought this one home just yesterday:


